Harmony Public Schools Grades K-2 Summer Reading Newsletter For some children, summer is a time dedicated to playing video games, sleeping in, vacationing and relaxing as much as possible before the beginning of yet another school year. Children may argue that summer should be spent taking a break from academics and enjoying doing “nothing”. As parents and educators we need to ensure that our children do not fall into what is commonly referred to as the “summer slide”. The summer slide: it sounds fun, but it can make the transition from grade to grade really difficult. Research shows that students who do not read during the summer may experience a decrease in their reading level. But guess what? Students who read regularly during the summer often improve their reading level and ability! Harmony students can start strong in the fall if their reading habits don’t “slide” away during the summer months. Tips to Promote Reading Schedule weekly trips to the public library Let your child pick reading material that is of interest to him/her Read together with your child Attend story hours, readings and plays offered at your local library or bookstore Encourage your child to read in bed. Consider letting your child stay up late if they read in bed Be a model: Read, read, read in front of your child In this newsletter we have posted a list of summer reading projects for students to select from. Additionally, you will find creative ways to engage your child with reading, strategies on how to help your child select texts, parent resources you can access online for free, as well as suggested reading lists (from the Boston Public Library Summer 2013 Reading Program). Grades K-2 Summer Reading Project Students in grades K-2 will be expected to read a minimum of four books and complete a project based on one of their summer reading selections. Students will also be responsible for completing a self-evaluation reading assignment rubric (see sample on next page) upon completion of their self-selected project. These projects were designed to promote creativity, engagement, and fun with reading! Students will have the choice of selecting from a variety of projects which they will bring with them on the first day of school. *The book lists that have been provided on subsequent pages are not mandatory for students to follow. Selections Write a new ending for your story. This new ending should be at least one page in length. Write a continuation of your story. What happens in the new ‘next’ chapter? This should be at least one page in length. Write a song that tells about your story. You may sing your song with or without music. This song can be pop, rap, rock, country—the choice is yours! Be prepared to perform this for the class or have someone video your performance and bring the DVD for us to enjoy! Make a 3-minute video recording with a reenactment of one of your favorite events from the story. You may use friends and family members as actors. Please copy the video onto a DVD, or schedule a time for your parent to bring the camcorder and necessary cables for viewing. Make a shadow box or diorama displaying your favorite scene. Write a comic book that tells about your favorite part of the books. The comic strip should have a minimum of six scenes or sections. Include comic-style illustrations in either black and white or color. Include dialogue bubbles too. Create your own comic strip or book online at: http://superherosquad.marvel.com/create_your_own_comic Remember to ask for parent permission first! Create a life-size portrait of one of the characters from your book. The portrait should include a written piece that tells about the character. The piece should also include information about events, traits, or conflicts in the book that involve the character. Grades K-2 Summer Reading Assignment Rubric—Self Evaluation Rate yourself on the text you selected and read Rate yourself on the quality of your project Rate yourself on your understanding of the text How would you rate the text you selected? Great! 4 I read the entire text. Good 3 I read most of the text. Okay 2 I read half of the text. Poor 1 I read a few pages of the text. Incomplete 0 I did not read a text. My project is wonderful! My project is good! I’m mostly happy with my project. I did not complete a project. I understood the text perfectly! I understood most of the text. I understood a few parts of the text. I started my project but did not complete the work. I understood very little of the text. It was perfect! I would recommend this text to others. The text was good; I think it would be worth reading. The text was okay. I would not recommend this text. I did not read a text. I did not read a text. How to Help Your Child Select Texts & Engage with Reading Give me Five! Helping your child select a “just right” book is very simple. To encourage youngsters to read it is important that they select books that are of interest to them and that they don’t encounter a level of reading frustration because the text is too difficult. A smart way to guide your child in proper book selections is to incorporate the “5-Finger Rule”. First, have your child choose a book they have an interest in reading. Next, open the book to a random page and have your child read aloud or whisper read the first few lines of the page. Listen carefully and ask your child to hold up one finger for each word that they do not know, or stumble upon. If your child holds up 5 fingers before reaching the end of the page, that is a sign that the book is too difficult. Holding up 1 finger or none signifies the text may be too easy. The magic number to look for is 2 fingers. The Five-Finger Rule 0-1 fingers = May be too easy! 2 fingers = Just right! 3 fingers = A little hard, but could still be fun to read. 4 fingers = Difficult to read—try reading with parents or friends 5 fingers = Too difficult for now—save it for next year! Making Connections Using text connections can help your child’s reading comprehension improve as they relate texts read into three categories: Text-to-Self Text-to-Text Text-to-World It’s a simple skill that takes just a few minutes. Stop, think, and reflect. Below are some sample questions you can ask your child about their reading endeavors. Text-to-Self: o Does this book remind you of something that has happened to you before? o How can you relate to this text? o Can you make a connection between one of the characters and yourself? Text-to-Text: o What happened in this book that reminds you of something that happened in another book? o o How is this book alike or different from the book you previously read? Does this remind you of a character form another book? Text-to-World: o Does this book remind you of any holidays you celebrate? o Does this remind you of anything that is currently happening in our world today or in the past? o Can you think of a place where this might happen? More Sizzling Summer Resources Scholastic Summer Challenge Visit the Scholastic book website where students can log reading hours to win digital prizes, and help set a new world record for summer reading. There is a great section for parents too! http://www.scholastic.com/summer/ Read Write Think A great free source for reading and literacy resources. Visit this site to learn more about “Bright Ideas for Summer”. http://www.readwritethink.org/bright-ideas/ IRA – International Reading Association The IRA compiles outstanding book lists with categories including Children’s Choice and Teachers’ Choices. http://www.reading.org/Resources/Booklists.aspx Reading Rockets This resource offers numerous articles for parents on the importance of reading, as well as booklists, & numerous activities designed to increase reading engagement & comprehension. http://www.readingrockets.org/calendar/summer/ AR Book Finder Parents and students can search this site for further suggested book titles based on students interest and reading levels. Access the AR Book Finder site here: www.arbookfind.com/UserType.aspx A Parent’s Guide to AR BookFinder can be found here: http://doc.renlearn.com/kmnet/R004037812GG7B98.pdf Summer 2013 Reading Book List: Grades K-2 Boston Public Library 2013 Summer Reading Program Picture Books BOOK TITLE The Great Kapok Tree A Couple of Boys Have the Best Week Ever The Man Who Walked Between the Towers Dog Magic Lilly’s Purple Plastic Purse The Colour of Home Rosie's Walk A Sweet Smell of Roses Henry’s Freedom Box: A True Story from the Underground Railroad Otis How I Became a Pirate Crow Call The Ballot Box Battle Moses Goes to a Concert My Rows and Piles of Coins Zin! Zin! Zin! A Violin The Gingerbread Man Loose in the School Officer Buckle and Gloria My Name is Yoon Grandfather’s Journey The Lorax How I Learned Geography Wild About Books Saving Sweetness A Sick Day for Amos McGee Doctor De Soto Interrupting Chicken Zachary’s Ball Mailing May Ira Sleeps Over Show Way Owl Moon AUTHOR Cherry Frazee Gerstein Golembe Henkes Hoffman Hutchins Johnson Levine Long, L. Long, M. Lowry McCully Millman Mollel Moss Murray Rathmann Recorvits Say Seuss Shulevitz Sierra Stanley Stead Steig Stein Tavares Tunnell Waber Woodson Yolen Folk Tales & Fairy Tales BOOK TITLE Aladdin and the Wonderful Lamp The Magic Gourd The Snow Queen Saint George and the Dragon Fables AUTHOR Carrick Diakite Ehrlich, adpt. Hodges Lobel Summer 2013 Reading Book List: Grades K-2 Boston Public Library 2013 Summer Reading Program Beginning to Read Books BOOK TITLE Biscuit (series) Minnie and Moo (series) Gilbert and the Lost Tooth Bink & Gollie (series) Flat Stanley (Easy Reader series) Penny (series) Pearl and Wagner (series) Katie Woo, Where Are You? (series) Fancy Nancy (series) Annie and Snowball (series) Jon Scieszka’s Trucktown (series) Cowgirl Kate and Cocoa (series) Amanda Pig (series) Elephant and Piggie (series) AUTHOR Capucilli Cazet deGroat DiCamillo Haskins Henkes McMullan Manushkin O'Connor Rylant Scieszka Silverman Van Leeuwen Willems Chapter Books BOOK TITLE Ivy and Bean (series) Tumtum and Nutmeg (series) Violet Mackerel (series) Flat Stanley (series) Mercy Watson (series) Sugar Plum Ballerinas (series) Princess Posey (series) Just Grace (series) Ballpark Mysteries (series) Alvin Ho (series) Ruby Lu (series) Stink (series) Lulu and the Duck in the Park (and sequel) Rainbow Magic Fairies (series) Nancy Clancy (series) Clementine (series) A to Z Mysteries (series) No-Dogs-Allowed Rule Geronimo Stilton / Thea Stilton (series) Lulu and the Brontosaurus (and sequel) AUTHOR Barrows Bearn Branford Brown DiCamillo Goldberg Greene Harper Kelly Look Look McDonald McKay Meadows O'Connor Pennypacker Roy Sheth Stilton Viorst Summer 2013 Reading Book List: Grades K-2 Boston Public Library 2013 Summer Reading Program Poems, Riddles, and Songs BOOK TITLE In the Wild Poetrees Dear Hot Dog Simms Taback’s Great Big Book of Spacey, Snakey, Buggy Riddles My People Kids’ Funniest Knock-knocks De Colores and Other Latin American Folk Songs for Children Good Sports: Rhymes About Running, Jumping, Throwing and More Dark Emperor & Other Poems of the Night Ubiquitous: Celebrating Nature’s Survivors Mirror, Mirror: A Book of Reversible Verse Here’s a Little Poem: A Very First Book of Poetry AUTHOR Elliot Florian Gerstein Hall Hughes Keller Orozco Prelutsky Sidman Sidman Singer Yolen Nursery Rhymes BOOK TITLE Pio Peep! Traditional Spanish Nursery Rhymes Skip Across the Ocean: Nursery Rhymes from Around the World The Neighborhood Mother Goose Songs in the Shade of the Flamboyant Tree: French Creole Lullabies and Nursery Rhymes You Read to Me, I’ll Read to You: Very Short Mother Goose Tales to Read Together Red, Green, Blue: A First Book of Colors Pocketful of Posies: A Treasury of Nursery Rhymes Here Comes Mother Goose AUTHOR Ada Benjamin Crews Grosleziat, comp. Hoberman Jay Mavor Opie Summer 2013 Reading Book List: Grades K-2 Boston Public Library 2013 Summer Reading Program Informational Books BOOK TITLE About Space Coral Reefs I Fall Down Underground From Seed to Plant Ice Cream: The Full Scoop Tornadoes Barack Obama: Son of Promise, Child of Hope Abe Lincoln Crosses a Creek: A Tall, ThinT ale Did Dinosaurs Eat Pizza?: Mysteries Science Hasn't Solved The Beetle Book Can We Save the Tiger How to Clean a Hippopotamus Bird Talk Seeing Symmetry Let’s Talk About Race Astronaut Handbook Eight Days Gone Over and Under the Snow Seed, Soil, Sun: Earth’s Recipe for Food An Island Grows All Kinds of Friends, Even Green! Swirl by Swirl: Spirals in Nature Penguins Diego Rivera: His World and Ours Insect Detective AUTHOR Carson Chin Cobb Evans Gibbons Gibbons Gibbons Grimes Hokinson Hort Jenkins Jenkins Jenkins Judge Leedy Lester McCarthy McReynolds Messner Peterson Schaefer Senisi Sidman Simon Tonatiuh Voake Harmony Public Schools Grades 3-5 Summer Reading Newsletter For some children, summer is a time dedicated to playing video games, sleeping in, vacationing and relaxing as much as possible before the beginning of yet another school year. Children may argue that summer should be spent taking a break from academics and enjoying doing “nothing”. As parents and educators we need to ensure that our children do not fall into what is commonly referred to as the “summer slide”. The summer slide: it sounds fun, but it can make the transition from grade to grade really difficult. Research shows that students who do not read during the summer may experience a decrease in their reading level. But guess what? Students who read regularly during the summer often improve their reading level and ability! Harmony students can start strong in the fall if their reading habits don’t “slide” away during the summer months. Tips to Promote Reading Schedule weekly trips to the public library Let your child pick reading material that is of interest to him/her Read together with your child Attend story hours, readings and plays offered at your local library or bookstore Encourage your child to read in bed. Consider letting your child stay up late if they read in bed Be a model: Read, read, read in front of your child In this newsletter we have posted a list of summer reading projects for students to select from. Additionally, you will find creative ways to engage your child with reading, strategies on how to help your child select texts, parent resources you can access online for free, as well as suggested reading lists (from the Boston Public Library Summer 2013 Reading Program). Grades 3-5 Summer Reading Project Students in grades 3-5 will be expected to read a minimum of four books and complete a project based on one of their summer reading selections. Students will also be responsible for completing a self-evaluation reading assignment rubric (see sample on next page) upon completion of their self-selected project. These projects were designed to promote creativity, engagement, and fun with reading! Students will have the choice of selecting from a variety of projects which they will bring with them on the first day of school. *The book lists that have been provided on subsequent pages are not mandatory for students to follow. Selections Write a new ending for your story. This new ending should be at least one page in length. Write a continuation of your story. What happens in the new ‘next’ chapter? This should be at least one page in length. Write a song that tells about your story. You may sing your song with or without music. This song can be pop, rap, rock, country—the choice is yours! Be prepared to perform this for the class or have someone video your performance and bring the DVD for us to enjoy! Make a 3-minute video recording with a reenactment of one of your favorite events from the story. You may use friends and family members as actors. Please copy the video onto a DVD, or schedule a time for your parent to bring the camcorder and necessary cables for viewing. Make a shadow box or diorama displaying your favorite scene. Write a comic book that tells about your favorite part of the books. The comic strip should have a minimum of six scenes or sections. Include comic-style illustrations in either black and white or color. Include dialogue bubbles too. Create your own comic strip or book online at: http://superherosquad.marvel.com/create_your_own_comic Remember to ask for parent permission first! Create a life-size portrait of one of the characters from your book. The portrait should include a written piece that tells about the character. The piece should also include information about events, traits, or conflicts in the book that involve the character. Grades 3-5 Summer Reading Assignment Rubric—Self Evaluation Rate yourself on the text you selected and read Rate yourself on the quality of your project Rate yourself on your understanding of the text How would you rate the text you selected? Great! 4 I read the entire text. Good 3 I read most of the text. Okay 2 I read half of the text. Poor 1 I read a few pages of the text. Incomplete 0 I did not read a text. My project is wonderful! My project is good! I’m mostly happy with my project. I did not complete a project. I understood the text perfectly! I understood most of the text. I understood a few parts of the text. I started my project but did not complete the work. I understood very little of the text. It was perfect! I would recommend this text to others. The text was good; I think it would be worth reading. The text was okay. I would not recommend this text. I did not read a text. I did not read a text. How to Help Your Child Select Texts & Engage with Reading Give me Five! Helping your child select a “just right” book is very simple. To encourage youngsters to read it is important that they select books that are of interest to them and that they don’t encounter a level of reading frustration because the text is too difficult. A smart way to guide your child in proper book selections is to incorporate the “5-Finger Rule”. First, have your child choose a book they have an interest in reading. Next, open the book to a random page and have your child read aloud or whisper read the first few lines of the page. Listen carefully and ask your child to hold up one finger for each word that they do not know, or stumble upon. If your child holds up 5 fingers before reaching the end of the page, that is a sign that the book is too difficult. Holding up 1 finger or none signifies the text may be too easy. The magic number to look for is 2 fingers. The Five-Finger Rule 0-1 fingers = May be too easy! 2 fingers = Just right! 3 fingers = A little hard, but could still be fun to read. 4 fingers = Difficult to read—try reading with parents or friends 5 fingers = Too difficult for now—save it for next year! Making Connections Using text connections can help your child’s reading comprehension improve as they relate texts read into three categories: Text-to-Self Text-to-Text Text-to-World It’s a simple skill that takes just a few minutes. Stop, think, and reflect. Below are some sample questions you can ask your child about their reading endeavors. Text-to-Self: o Does this book remind you of something that has happened to you before? o How can you relate to this text? o Can you make a connection between one of the characters and yourself? Text-to-Text: o What happened in this book that reminds you of something that happened in another book? o o How is this book alike or different from the book you previously read? Does this remind you of a character form another book? Text-to-World: o Does this book remind you of any holidays you celebrate? o Does this remind you of anything that is currently happening in our world today or in the past? o Can you think of a place where this might happen? More Sizzling Summer Resources Scholastic Summer Challenge Visit the Scholastic book website where students can log reading hours to win digital prizes, and help set a new world record for summer reading. There is a great section for parents too! http://www.scholastic.com/summer/ Read Write Think A great free source for reading and literacy resources. Visit this site to learn more about “Bright Ideas for Summer”. http://www.readwritethink.org/bright-ideas/ IRA – International Reading Association The IRA compiles outstanding book lists with categories including Children’s Choice and Teachers’ Choices. http://www.reading.org/Resources/Booklists.aspx Reading Rockets This resource offers numerous articles for parents on the importance of reading, as well as booklists, & numerous activities designed to increase reading engagement & comprehension. http://www.readingrockets.org/calendar/summer/ AR Book Finder Parents and students can search this site for further suggested book titles based on students interest and reading levels. Access the AR Book Finder site here: www.arbookfind.com/UserType.aspx A Parent’s Guide to AR BookFinder can be found here: http://doc.renlearn.com/kmnet/R004037812GG7B98.pdf Summer 2013 Reading Book List Grades 3-5 Boston Public Library 2013 Summer Reading Program Contemporary Fiction BOOK TITLE Tia Lola (series) The Strange Case of Origami Yoda (series) Because of Mr. Terupt Room One: A Mystery or Two Hate that Cat: A Novel Salsa Stories The Lemonade War The Magician’s Elephant The Spiderwick Chronicles (series) Brendan Buckley’s Universe and Everything in It Joey Pigza Swallowed the Key Make Way for Dyamonde Daniel The Road to Paris The Homework Machine When Mules Flew on Magnolia Street Diary of a Wimpy Kid (series) Inside Out and Back Again Alvin Ho (series) Ruby Lu (series) Julia Gillian (And the Art of Knowing) Junebug (series) Get Ready for Gabi (series) Next to Mexico Shiloh The Small Adventure of Popeye and Elvis Wonder Big Nate (series) Ninth Ward 39 Clues (series) Smells Like Treasure Younguncle Comes to Town A Series of Unfortunate Events (series) No Girls Allowed (Dogs Okay) Peace, Locomotion AUTHOR Alvarez Angleberger Buyea Clements Creech Delacre Davies DiCamillo DiTerlizzi Frazier Gantos Grimes Grimes Gutman Johnson Kinney Lai Look Look McGee Mead Montes Nails Naylor O'Connor Palacio Peirce Rhodes Scholastic (many authors) Selfors Singh Snicket Trueit Woodson Summer 2013 Reading Book List Grades 3-5 Boston Public Library 2013 Summer Reading Program Historical Fiction BOOK TITLE Jefferson's Sons Sadako and the Thousand Paper Cranes Elijah of Buxton The Mighty Miss Malone The Giant Rat of Sumatra: Or Pirates Galore Number the Stars Scraps of Time (series) The King of Mulberry Street Faith, Hope, and Ivy June Keeping Score Trouble Don’t Last Riding Freedom Dear America (series) [includes My Name is America and Royal Diaries series] Countdown One Crazy Summer Breaking Stalin’s Nose The Dragon’s Child: A Story of Angel Island AUTHOR Bradley Coerr Curtis Curtis Fleischman Lowry McKissack Napoli Naylor Park Pearsall Ryan Scholastic (many authors) Wiles Williams-Garcia Yelchin Yep Fantasy/Science Fiction BOOK TITLE Secrets of Droon (series) Whales on Stilts Dragon Castle The Sisters Grimm (series) Hiccup Horrendous Haddock III (series) The Dream Stealer Tuesdays at the Castle Sardines in Outer Space (series) Warrior (series) A Wrinkle in Time Where the Mountain Meets the Moon Charlie Bone (series) Magic Tree House (series) The Magic Thief (series) Harry Potter (series) The Night Fairy Alien Feast The Books of Elsewhere (series) City of Fire/City of Ice Secrets of Droon (series) AUTHOR Abbott Anderson Bruchac Buckley Cowell Fleischman George Guibert Hunter L'Engle Lin Nimmo Osborne Prineas Rowling Schlitz Simmons West Yep Abbott Summer 2013 Reading Book List Grades 3-5 Boston Public Library 2013 Summer Reading Program Biography BOOK TITLE Side by Side/Lado a Lado: The Story of Dolores Huerta and César Chávez/La Historia de Dolores Huerta y César Chávez Barnum’s Bones: How Barnum Brown Discovered the Most Famous Dinosaur in the World Jimi: Sounds Like a Rainbow: A Story of the Young Jimi Hendrix Dave the Potter: Artist, Poet, Slave Jim Henson: The Guy Who Played with Puppets Temple Grandin: How the Girl who Loved Cows Embraced Autism and Changed the World Nurse, Soldier, Spy: The Story of Sarah Edmonds, a Civil War Hero Monsieur Marceau Balloons over Broadway: The True Story of the Puppeteer of Macy’s Parade Sonia Sotomayer: A Judge Grows up in the Bronx Roberto Clemente: Pride of the Pittsburgh Pirates AUTHOR Brown Fern Golio Hill Krull Montgomery Moss Schubert Sweet Winter Winter Folktales, Fairy Tales & Legends BOOK TITLE Tales Our Abuelitas Told: A Hispanic Folktale Collection Persephone Glass Slipper, Gold Sandal: A Worldwide Cinderella Her Stories: African American Folktales, Fairy Tales, and True Tales The Wise Fool: Fables from the Islamic World The Magical Monkey King: Mischief in Heaven The Blue Fairy Book (series The Boy from the Dragon Palace Pig-Boy: A Trickster Tale from Hawaii Genies, Meanies, and Magic Rings: Three Tales from the Arabian Nights More Bones: Scary Stories from Around the World The Beautiful Stories of Life: Six Greek Myths, Retold AUTHOR Campoy and Ada Clayton Fleischman Hamilton Husain Jiang Lang MacDonald McDermott Mitchell Olson Rylant Summer 2013 Reading Book List Grades 3-5 Boston Public Library 2013 Summer Reading Program Informational Books BOOK TITLE Slow Down for Manatees Jurassic Poop: What Dinosaurs (and others) Left Behind Dinosaurs in Your Backyard Citizen Scientists: Be a Part of Scientific Discovery from Your Own Backyard Bat Scientists Extreme Animals: The Toughest Creatures on Earth Haunted Histories: Creepy Castles, Dark Dungeons, and Powerful Palaces Ballet for Martha The Wolves Are Back Galaxies, Galaxies! The Reasons for Seasons Bones: Skeletons and How They Work Boston Tea Party The Tarantula Scientist Remember: The Journey to School Integration Polar Bears We Are the Ship: The Story of Negro League Baseball How to Clean A Hippopotamus Discovering Black America AUTHOR Arnosky Berkowitz Brewster Burns Carson Davies Everett Greenberg George Gibbons Gibbons Jenkins Kroll Montgomery Morrison Newman Nelson Page Tarrant-Reid Poetry BOOK TITLE Animal Poems of the Iguazu Sol a Sol: Original and Selected Bilingual Poems Outside Your Window In the Wild Messing Around on the Monkey Bars: And Other School Poems for Two Voices Hip Hop Speaks to Children: A Celebration of Poetry with a Beat The Great Migration: Journey to the North Love to Langston Tap Dancing on the Roof: Sijo (Poems) The 20th Century Children’s Poetry Treasury Guyku: A Year of Haiku for Boys The Hound Dog's Haiku: And Other Poems for Dog Lovers AUTHOR Alarcon Carlson Davies Elliot Franco Giovanni Greenfield Medina Park Pelutsky Raczka Rosen What Is the Children’s Choices Project? E ach year 12,500 school children from different regions of the United States read newly published children’s and young adults’ trade books and vote for the ones they like best. These Children’s Choices, selected from more than 500 titles, can be counted on as books children really enjoy reading. This list, a project of a joint committee supported by IRA and The Children’s Book Children’s s e c i o Ch 2 01 3 Council (CBC), is designed for use not only by teachers, librarians, administrators, and booksellers but also by parents, grandparents, caregivers, and everyone who wishes to encourage young people to read for pleasure. for the See page 15 n’s Choices Childre g List 2013 Readin bookmark! Logo illustration © by Tomie dePaola Photo: © 2013 Shutterstock Images LLC 1 Beginning Readers (Grades K–2) ddddd Amelia Bedelia’s First Vote Bad Apple: A Tale of Friendship Herman Parish. Ill. Lynne Avril. HarperCollins Children’s Books/Greenwillow. Edward Hemingway. Penguin Young Readers Group. It’s election time, and Amelia decides students should be allowed to vote on rules at school. Amelia’s humor and mishaps mixes with valid information about the election process. Mac and Will are unlikely friends. Mac is an apple, and Will is a worm. When the other apples make fun of Mac, Will decides Mac will be happier without him. Will true friendship survive? Back to Front and Upside Down Bailey at the Museum Claire Alexander. Eerdmans Books for Young Readers. Harry Bliss. Scholastic. Stan loves to draw pictures but when he writes, the letters look wrong. He asks the teacher for help, and letters make sense. The warm story reminds everyone that sometimes we all need help to learn something new. Bailey goes on a field trip to the Museum of Natural History. He likes the dinosaur bones best but quickly learns they aren’t for climbing or chewing! Through Bailey’s eyes, children get a glimpse of famous exhibits in the museum. From Bailey at the Mu Lynn e Vote by Herm an Parish. Ill. From Amelia Bedelia’s First s/Greenwillow. Book ren’s Child llins erCo Avril. Harp 2 C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 From Back to Front and Upside Down! by Claire Alexander. Eerdmans Books for Young Readers. © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n seum by Harry Blis s. Scholas tic. Bedtime for Monsters Ed Vere. Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. As a monster “bump bumpity bumps” through the forest and “gloop, gloop, schloops” through the swamp, suspense and tension build. Playful language captivates children as the monster draws nearer, and a silly, surprise ending leaves them relieved and laughing! *Big Mean Mike Michelle Knudsen. Ill. Scott Magoon. Candlewick. Big Mean Mike is the meanest dog around. Big Mean Mike drives a Big Mean car or he did until the cute, fuzzy bunnies show up. Maybe Big Mean Mike isn’t quite as gruff as he pretends. *The Duckling Gets a Cookie!? Mo Willems. Hyperion Books for Children. Pigeon feels he’s been treated unfairly—AGAIN! When the duckling gets a cookie just by politely asking for it, Pigeon is outraged! The expressions and body language captured in the text and illustrations keep readers young and old laughing hysterically! Every Cowgirl Loves a Rodeo Rebecca Janni. Ill. Lynne Avril. Dial Books for Young Readers. might not win a blue ribbon, but her actions remind readers about what’s most important in competition and friendship. The Fly Flew In David Catrow. Holiday House. Buzz! The pesky fly flies and disrupts everything. He lands in hair and on food and buzzes around the musicians. Children will keep reading the hilarious antics of swatting and cymbals clashing to get rid of the fly. Frog and Fly: Six Slurpy Stories Jeff Mack. Philomel. Six spare, slurpy stories about frog and fly. Casualties: five flies and one frog. Children will enjoy the cute illustrations that complement their banter and shenanigans. Goldilocks and the Three Dinosaurs Mo Willems. HarperCollins Children’s Books. What an amazing new twist on the familiar classic! When three hungry dinosaurs set a trap for Goldilocks, she narrowly escapes. Willems misses no opportunity to amuse the reader with clever text and illustrations that only get funnier with each rereading! Nellie Sue enters the bike rodeo at the county fair and finds herself roping a goat to help a friend. She From Bedtime for Mo nsters by Ed Vere. Hen ry Holt Books for Young Reader s. : Six Slurpy Stories From Frog and Fly Philomel. by Jef f Ma ck. From Big Mean Mike by Michelle Knudsen. Ill. Scott Magoon. Candlewick. © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 3 From Little Dog Lost: The True Story of a Brave Dog Named Baltic by Mônica Carnesi. Nancy Paulsen Books. gy by Kim Nor man. From I Know a Wee Pig der s. Books for Young Rea Ill. Henry Cole. Dial From Llama Llama Time to Share by Anna De wdney. Children’s Books Viking . Good News, Bad News Lenore Finds a Friend: A True Story From Bedlam Farm Jeff Mack. Chronicle. A rabbit and mouse go for an eventful picnic with good and bad things happening. Good News and Bad News as the book’s only words tell about each superbly illustrated full-page picture. This book is excellent for emergent readers. I Know a Wee Piggy Kim Norman. Ill. Henry Cole. Dial Books for Young Readers. Color-filled read-aloud with a rampaging pig. Children will enjoy piggy’s antics and anticipate the chance to predict the next color he runs amuck in. *I’ll Save You Bobo! Eileen Rosenthal. Ill. Marc Rosenthal. Simon & Schuster. Willy’s own written story comes to life when Earl, his cat, becomes an acting character. Commonalities are noted when roles are reversed with a happy ending. This simple story will stimulate anyone’s imagination and desire to write. Ladybug Girl and Bingo Jacky Davis. Ill. David Soman. Dial Books for Young Readers. Lulu and her dog, Bingo, go camping with her family for the first time. When Bingo gets lost in the woods, it’s Ladybug Girl to the rescue. 4 C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 Jon Katz. Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. This true story about a lonely new puppy on Bedlam Farm named Lenore who is finally welcomed by a grumpy ram named Brutus gives children confidence that new friendships can develop when least expected. Irresistible photographs tug at readers’ heartstrings. Library Mouse: A Museum Adventure Daniel Kirk. Abrams Books for Young Readers. In this continuation of the story of Sam, the library mouse, he leaves the walls of the library and ventures to the museum. Sam records his adventure in his explorer’s journal. Little Dog Lost: The True Story of a Brave Dog Named Baltic Mônica Carnesi. Nancy Paulsen Books. Meet Baltic, a curious dog who suddenly becomes stranded on a sheet of ice as it moves swiftly down the Vistula River in Poland. Read the true story of his dramatic rescue in the icy waters of the Baltic Sea. It is a must read, especially if you love animals! Llama Llama Time to Share Anna Dewdney. Viking Children’s Books. Learning to share is difficult. Llama learns to share with a friend after a cherished toy is torn and repaired. Animal characters and few words on a page make the book motivating and meaningful for any reader. © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n tons by Eric His Four Groovy But From Pete the Cat and Children’s Books. lins Col per Har n. Litwin. Ill. Jam es Dea From Pig Has a Plan by Ethan Long. Holiday House. From Plant a Kiss by Amy Krou se Rosenthal. Ill. Peter H. Reyn olds. Harp erCollins Children’s Book s. Mice on Ice *Pete the Cat and His Four Groovy Buttons Rebecca Emberley and Ed Emberley. Holiday House. Eric Litwin. Ill. James Dean. HarperCollins Children’s Books. Skate your way into this story of several mice who find themselves carving out a design in the ice. “What is that?” they ask and, instantly, the design takes shape into a creature often feared by mice. Children can find out what it is when you read Mice on Ice. Everyone’s favorite cool cat is back, this time wearing a shirt with four groovy buttons. Alas, the buttons pop off one by one and are lost. Will Pete cry? “Goodness, no!” children respond along with the narrator. Pig Has a Plan Miss Fox’s Class Gets It Wrong Eileen Spinelli. Ill. Anne Kennedy. Albert Whitman & Company. Miss Fox’s first-grade students don’t understand what is wrong with their teacher. Did she break the law and get into trouble? They make guesses and tell stories. In another Miss Fox story, children will learn a lesson: Don’t gossip! *Nighttime Ninja Barbara DaCosta. Ill. Ed Young. Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. While everyone sleeps, the Nighttime Ninja stealthily moves through the quiet house. He is on a secret mission. Children will delight following the little Ninja as he creeps and clambers through the house to find his treasure. Otto the Book Bear Katie Cleminson. Disney/Hyperion. Otto walks out of his book and wanders around the family’s house unnoticed. When the family packs away the book without him in it, he goes on an adventure that will leave readers reimagining how books can come alive. Ethan Long. Holiday House. Pig plans to take a nap. He can’t figure out why everyone else is being so noisy. He tries to escape, only to find a surprise waiting for him. Children will laugh at the surprise ending to Pig’s napping plans. Piggy Bunny Rachel Vail. Ill. Jeremy Tankard. Feiwel & Friends. Poor Liam wants to be the Easter Bunny, but he’s a pig. He has big dreams and will work hard to reach them. This warm story will show children that with work, dreams can come true. Plant a Kiss Amy Krouse Rosenthal. Ill. Peter H. Reynolds. HarperCollins Children’s Books. Dazzling, glittered illustrations, coupled with simple but powerful rhyme capture the fantastic journey of “Little Miss” who “planted a kiss,” carefully tended it, believed in its potential to grow, and kindly shared the love she had cultivated throughout the world. © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 5 Rat and Roach: Friends to the End Silly Doggy! David Covel. Viking Children’s Books. Adam Stower. Orchard/Scholastic. In this comical story, messy Rat and tidy Roach find that friendship between opposites can be a good thing. Simple but well-executed illustrations accentuate their differences and heighten the humor. Secret Agent Splat! Rob Scotton. HarperCollins Children’s Books. When Splat the Cat notices someone has messed with his treasured toy ducks, he uses his trusty spy kit to thoroughly investigate. The culprit’s motive comes as a surprise! Clever duck code letters present readers with their own puzzle-solving opportunity! Señorita Gordita Helen Ketteman. Ill. Will Terry. Albert Whitman & Company. This Tex-Mex flavored retelling of The Gingerbread Man is rich with cultural references as hungry animals of the southwest chase Señorita Gordita through the desert. A glossary of Spanish words and a recipe for gorditas provide the perfect finishing touch! Newspaper clippings alerting the public of escaped zoo animals start this whimsical tale. Confusing a big, brown, hairy, four-legged animal with a tail and wet nose for a dog, Lily’s amusing, beautifully illustrated adventures with an escaped bear unfold! The Three Ninja Pigs Corey Rosen Schwartz. Ill. Dan Santat. Penguin Young Readers Group. A comical, rhythmic mix of martial arts meets fairy tale. When the three little pigs are tired of being bullied by the big, bad wolf they decide to learn to defend themselves. This hilarious story can teach lessons about bullying, perseverance, and confidence. Tyler Makes Pancakes! Tyler Florence. Ill. Craig Frazier. HarperCollins Children’s Books. Tyler dreams about pancakes. In the morning, he decides to surprise his parents by making some. The friendly grocer tells him where each ingredient comes from. Tyler’s dog, Tofu, tags along on this adventure. The blueberry pancake recipe is included. From Silly Doggy! by Adam Stower. Orchard/Scholastic. From Rat and Ro ach: Friends to the End by David Co Children’s Books vell. Vik . 6 C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 Pigs by Corey Ros en From The Three Ninja Reader s tat. Penguin Young San Dan Ill. Schwar tz. Group. ing © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n Young Readers (Grades 3–4) ddddd 5,000 Awesome Facts (About Everything!) Dear Cinderella National Geographic Kids. Ill. with photographs. National Geographic Children’s Books. Mary Jane Kensington and Marian Moore. Ill. Julie Olson. Orchard/Scholastic. This book has something for everyone, including reluctant readers! Each cleverly titled two-page spread offers facts organized around a variety of subjects, such as “100 Shark Facts You Can Sink Your Teeth Into!” Includes an index for easy navigation. Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers: Super Bowl XLV Michael Sandler. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Aaron Rodgers replaced the idolized quarterback Brett Favre. He had proved he was a good player, helping the team win important games. Rodgers, however, would need to lead the team to win a Super Bowl game. Another Brother Matthew Cordell. Feiwel & Friends. Davey is an only child who relishes being the center of attention. Then one day his mom has a baby brother, then another and another and...soon, Davey is one of 12! Read how Davey deals with his brothers and find out the new surprise waiting for him! *Bad Kitty for President Nick Bruel. Roaring Brook. Kids learn the language and logistics of elections through Bad Kitty’s campaign for the presidency of the Neighborhood Cat Club. Bad Kitty’s signature antics and Nick Bruel’s blend of text and illustrations keep kids laughing. Includes a glossary of election terms. This book is a twist on traditional fairy tales. It is a collection of letters between Cinderella and Snow White. They share their stories of wicked stepmothers and dreamy princes. Dolphins in the Navy Meish Goldish. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Dolphins have been trained by the U.S. Navy to do important and dangerous jobs. They find bombs and look for enemies. This book tells how the Navy trained and cared for both dolphins and sea lions. Freaky-Strange Buildings Michael Sandler. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Students eagerly hop aboard for an exciting tour of the world’s most unusual buildings. Comparisons such as “about as tall as 30 giraffes stacked on top of each other” assist readers in understanding buildings’ unique features. Index and glossary included. Garmann’s Secret Stian Hole. Eerdmans Books for Young Readers. Even though the twins, Hannah and Johanna, look identical, Garmann knows they’re actually very different. One day Johanna takes Garmann to their secret place in the woods, and the two of them share their own secrets and an adventure together. *Get the Scoop on Animal Poop! From Lions to Tapeworms: 251 Cool Facts About Scat, Frass, Dung, and More! Dawn Cusick. Ill. with photographs. Imagine. Bully Patricia Polacco. Penguin Young Readers Group. Everything is going perfectly for Lyla in her new school until she stands up against a popular group of girls. She becomes the girls’ next target. This great story will help young people explore the issue of bullying in cyberspace and on social networks. Kids who pick up this book for gross-out value will stick around for the bright photo illustrations and fascinating facts. Includes a glossary, further resources, and two indexes (subject and organism). © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 7 From Great Dane: Gentle Giant by Ste ph en Person. Be arport. From Illusionology: The Secret Science of Magic by Albert Schafer. Ill. David Wyatt and Levi Pinfold. Candlewick. Bad Luck Charm by Meg an From Judy Moody and the olds. Candlewick. Reyn H. r Pete Ill. d. onal McD Giants Beware! Judy Moody and the Bad Luck Charm Jorge Aguirre. Ill. Rafael Rosado. First Second. Megan McDonald. Ill. Peter H. Reynolds. Candlewick. Feisty Claudette, her cowardly brother, and a princess wannabe are on an action-filled and often funny quest to slay giants. In this graphic novel, they learn that being a hero takes intelligence, courage, and heart. Great Dane: Gentle Giant Stephen Person. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Gibson is a therapy dog, and he was the tallest Great Dane in the Guinness Book of Records. Then George stood even taller than Gibson! Children will enjoy reading fun facts about the gentle and tallest dogs in the world. *Homer Diane deGroat and Shelley Rotner. Orchard/ Scholastic. Will Homer, the hard-hitting Golden Retriever, help the Doggers triumph over the Hounds? Older children can’t wait to read which team wins the dog championship in this delightfully fun baseball story. Illusionology: The Secret Science of Magic Albert Schafer. Ill. David Wyatt and Levi Pinfold. Candlewick. Enter the fascinating world of magicians and their illusions. Learn the secrets of the great masters and perform your own tricks with step-by-step instructions in this book full of flaps, envelopes, and magician’’ tools. 8 C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 Judy Moody’s spunky personality continues to fascinate 8- and 9-year-old readers with familiar events to which they can relate. In this fast-paced adventure, Judy Moody’s lucky penny initially brings her abundant good fortune, but good luck can’t last forever! *Just Joking: 300 Hilarious Jokes, Tricky Tongue Twisters, and Ridiculous Riddles National Geographic Children’s Books. Ill. with photographs. National Geographic Children’s Books. This hilarious joke book is loaded with full-color and eye-catching photos. Kids enjoy challenging one another with tongue twisters and were entertained by the jokes, which often feature animals and are accompanied by bold graphics. Captions next to many of the photos inform readers with interesting facts about wild animals. Kevin Durant Michael Sandler. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Short biography about NBA star Kevin Durant focuses on his hard work, on-the-court success, and charitable contributions. A glossary with key vocabulary makes this a useful learning tool as well as a motivating sports book. © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n From Knuckle & Potty Dest roy Happy World by Jam es Proimos. Christy Ottaviano Book s. From Last Laughs: Animal Epitaphs by J. Patrick Lewis and Jane Yolen. Ill. Jeffrey Stewart Timmins. Charlesbridge. From My Pop-Up World Atlas Waterhouse. Templar. by Anita Ganeri. Ill. Stephen Knuckle & Potty Destroy Happy World The Monster Returns James Proimos. Christy Ottaviano Books. Peter McCarty. Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. Tiger and Bear, aka Knuckle and Potty, are fed up with their cute and cuddly image and go on a mission to convince their so-called “creators” to toughen up their act. What follows is a goofy and laugh-out-loud story that combines graphic novel cartooning and first-person narrative. When a paper airplane flies in his window, Jeremy finds out his monster is returning. Jeremy must think quickly. He invites his friends to help him with his plan. My Pop-Up World Atlas Last Laughs: Animal Epitaphs J. Patrick Lewis and Jane Yolen. Ill. Jeffrey Stewart Timmins. Charlesbridge. This collection of animal epitaphs is witty and full of puns. Included are tributes to the chicken who didn’t quite make it across the road and the deer who becomes venison, among others. Looking at Lincoln Maira Kalman. Nancy Paulsen Books. Older children will trace Lincoln’s journey from a log cabin to the presidency. Fun-filled facts help children get a close and personal view of Abraham Lincoln. They will learn about his favorite foods and music and his battle against slavery. Max Goes to the Moon: A Science Adventure With Max the Dog Jeffrey Bennett. Ill. Alan Okamoto. Big Kid Science. Max, the dog, and Tori, his human friend, pave the way for the return to space travel and to a space station on the moon. This adventurous story is combined with boxes filled with the science behind the story. Anita Ganeri. Ill. Stephen Waterhouse. Templar. The authors make geography come alive. Interesting facts, colorful illustrations, and multilayered continental pop-ups will keep children searching for more geographical facts about their world. Pigmares: Porcine Poems of the Silver Screen Doug Cushman. Charlesbridge. A little piggy watches scary monster movies before bedtime and has nightmares, or “pigmares.” Seventeen clever Pig poems spin off of famous creepy classic movies. *Pluto Visits Earth! Steve Metzger. Ill. Jared D. Lee. Orchard/ Scholastic. Disgruntled at being downgraded by astronomers to a dwarf planet in 2006, Pluto visits Earth to regain his status. While on Earth, a young boy helps Pluto realize that size doesn’t matter. Big or small, you can be equally special! © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 9 Quiz Whiz: 1,000 Super Fun, MindBending, Totally Awesome Trivia Questions National Geographic Kids. Ill. with photographs. National Geographic Children’s Books. Children will have a blast with this jam-packed trivia quiz book. Readers are presented with 1,000 questions on topics that include history, science, math, geography, and pop culture. A fun book to keep the mind informed and entertained. Saving Animals After Tornadoes Stephen Person. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. This book chronicles heartwarming stories of several animals whose lives were threatened by tornadoes. Children who enjoyed this book will undoubtedly be intrigued by other titles in this series that consider animals’ fates when faced with fire, floods, and volcanoes. Stupendous Sports Stadiums Michael Sandler. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Part of a series that also examines amusement park rides, buildings, and skyscrapers. Eight sports stadiums are identified by their opening date, location, capacity, and stupendous feature. A table of contents, captions, glossary, and index aid in navigation of text. Surviving the Hindenburg Larry Verstraete. Ill. David Geister. Sleeping Bear. A sudden explosion and roaring fire surround Werner, and the 14-year-old cabin boy must find an escape. The nonfiction story gives a gripping account of one person’s survival from the fiery furnace of the historical Hindenburg disaster. Third Grade Angels Jerry Spinelli. Arthur Levine Books/Scholastic. A third-grade teacher awards her best children with angel halos. George changes his attitude, expresses his thoughts, and works hard to become an angel. Although it appears that he will not get it, an unexpected event brings victory. Touch the Sky: Alice Coachman, Olympic High Jumper Ann Malaspina. Ill. Eric Velasquez. Albert Whitman & Company. Inspiring and beautifully illustrated. Alice Coachman grows up in 1930s rural Georgia dreaming of being a high jumper. She is eventually added to the Tuskegee Institute track team and becomes the first black woman to win an Olympic gold medal. From Surviving the Hindenburg by Larry Verstraete. Ill. David Geister. Sleeping Bear. r Fun, Mind-Bending, From Quiz Whiz: 1,00 0 Supe tions . National Totally Awesome Trivia Ques s. Geographic Children’s Book 10 C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n From Third Grade Angels by Jerry Spinelli. Art hur Levine Books /Sc holas tic. Advanced Readers (Grades 5–6) ddddd A Black Hole Is Not a Hole Carolyn Cinami DeCristofano. Ill. Michael Carroll. Charlesbridge. Interesting information and detailed pictures draw older children into the scientific exploration of black holes in outer space. Older readers will keep turning the page to find out facts about the dark mystery in the universe. The Boy Project: Notes and Observations of Kara McAllister Kami Kinard. Scholastic. Boyfriend-obsessed Kara is the only girl in school who doesn’t have one. She decides to apply the scientific method to this problem—studying boys, taking notes, and graphing observations. Hypothesis: Readers will laugh and cringe as Kara’s experiment backfires. *Dork Diaries 4: Tales From a Not-SoGraceful Ice Princess Rachel Renée Russell. Simon & Schuster. Written in quickly read, illustrated diary entries, adolescent girls resonate with the issues Nikki faces. As she works to save the animal shelter from closing, she must also deal with mean girl MacKenzie, her crush Brandon, self-doubt, and her totally embarrassing family. Freaky Fast Frankie Joe Lutricia Clifton. Holiday House. With mom in jail, Frankie moves in with his father, stepmother, and four half-brothers. While managing his “Freaky Fast Delivery Service,” designed to raise money so he can reunite with his mother, Frankie gains a new understanding of life. Goosebumps: Wanted: The Haunted Mask Broxo R.L. Stine. Goosebumps/Scholastic. Zack Giallongo. First Second. Princess Zora sets out alone into the dark forest. She encounters the young warrior Broxo and together they fight through many dangers to discover the mystery of the Peryton clan. Nonstop action and boy-meets-girl backdrop propel the graphic novel. In this Halloween tale, an evil, ugly mask does much more than scare people at a party. The mask turns an ordinary Halloween party into a horribly haunted affair. Hades: Lord of the Dead (Olympians, Vol. 4) George O’Connor. First Second. Cardboard Doug Tennapel. Graphix/Scholastic. A lonely father and son create cardboard real-life characters with a magic machine. A war between good and bad characters is fought with their involvement. Comic strip reading creates high interest for both readers and nonreaders. Hades, the Lord of the Underworld, rises up to star in this action-packed tale of love and revenge. Not only is the story an exciting retelling of Hades’s abduction of Persephone, but also the art offers breathtakingly beautiful renditions of the underworld and other mythical locations. Haunted Caves Dark Mansions Dinah Williams. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. This nonfiction text profiles several famous “haunted” mansions and the lore surrounding them. The stories are supported with photographs, sidebars, and an extensive glossary that helps provide context. Natalie Lunis. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Haunted Caves takes readers inside 11 of the most frightening, claustrophobia-inducing places on Earth. From a lost treasure in Spain to a giant underground lake in the United States, you’ll see it all in startling, full-color detail! © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 11 Haunted Histories: Creepy Castles, Dark Dungeons, and Powerful Palaces J.H. Everett and Marilyn Scott-Waters. Christy Ottaviano Books. The Ancient Order of Ghostorians visit ghosts and gather historical information. They provide children with a fun and interesting look at castles, medieval class systems, dungeons and prisons, torture, workhouses, palaces from England to India, and heraldic symbols and monuments. The Hero’s Guide to Saving Your Kingdom Christopher Healy. Ill. Todd Harris. Walden Pond/ HarperCollins Children’s Books. Four rejected princes, who in the past have only been known collectively as “Prince Charming,” stumble upon an evil plan that threatens their kingdoms. Thwarting several evils, heroism is finally acknowledged! This original fractured fairy tale has cross-gender appeal. Horrible Hauntings: An Augmented Reality Collection of Ghosts and Ghouls Shirin Yim Bridges. Ill. William Maughan. Goosebottom. Eight ghost sightings are described and coupled with eight full-page complementary illustrations. After uploading a free app to their phone or tablet, py Castles,Dark From Haunted Histories: Cree ces by J.H. Everett and Dungeons, and Powerful Pala sty Ottaviano Book s. Chri ters. t-Wa Scot lyn Mari 12 C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 students worked to see ghosts come to life in these illustrations. This motivated even the most reluctant reader! I Lay My Stitches Down: Poems of American Slavery Cynthia Grady. Ill. Michele Wood. Eerdmans Books for Young Readers. Each rich and detailed poem is part of a quilting pattern design weaving together the hopes, dreams, and spirituality of American slaves. Rich in symbolism, older readers will appreciate the beauty of each story told in poetic form. Legends of Zita the Spacegirl Ben Hatke. First Second. In this graphic novel, Zita has a robot double that is making trouble. Zita is determined to find a way to return home to Earth. Her adventure helps her learn how to be herself. *Liar & Spy Rebecca Stead. Wendy Lamb Books. When seventh grader Georges moves into a Brooklyn apartment building, he meets Safer, a 12-year-old self-proclaimed spy. Safer convinces Georges to be his first spy recruit and together they watch Mr. X, a neighbor who might be hiding a dangerous secret. Readers won’t be able to put this one down! From I Lay My Stitches Down: Poems of American Slavery by Cynthia Grady. Ill. Michele Wood. Eerdmans Books for Young Readers. © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n From Liar & Spy by Reb ecc a Ste ad. Wendy Lam Books. b *Pickle: The (Formerly) Anonymous Prank Club of Fountain Point Middle School Kim Baker. Ill. Tim Probert. Roaring Brook. Ben Diaz and four engaging middle grades characters from various ethnic backgrounds form the League of Pickle Masters, a secret society for goofing off and performing harmless pranks. This book keeps students laughing while learning valuable lessons about friendship. Pip and the Wood Witch Curse: A Spindlewood Tale (Book 1) *Rebel McKenzie Candice Ransom. Disney/Hyperion. Rebel wants to attend the Ice Age Kids’ Dig and Safari, a summer camp, but summer camps cost money. Rebel sets out to win a beauty contest and some prize money, but ends up learning a lot about herself. Remarkable Chris Mould. Albert Whitman & Company. Pip runs away from the orphanage and from being a pirate’s cabin boy. He comes to Hangman’s Hollow and the city’s war with the forest and the wood witches. This dark tale is the first in the new Spindlewood Tales series. Presidential Pets: The Weird, Wacky, Little, Big, Scary, Strange Animals That Have Lived in the White House Julia Moberg. Ill. Jeff Albrecht Studios. Imagine. Poetry, presidential stats, and interesting pets fill this colorfully illustrated book. Discovering that the White House was home to pets such as a dog named From Presidential Pet s: The Weird, Wacky, Little, Big, Scary, Strange Animals Tha t Have Lived in the Wh ite House by Julia Moberg. Ill. Jeff Alb recht Studio s. Imagin e. Satan, bear cubs, alligators, and a swearing parrot provides children with a fun way to learn presidential facts. Lizzie K. Foley. Dial Books for Young Readers. Ordinary Jane Doe does not fit in with others in the town of Remarkable, where everyone is extraordinary. When citizens in town are in jeopardy of having damaging secrets divulged, Jane must solve the mystery and save the day. Ruby Redfort Look Into My Eyes Lauren Child. Candlewick. Ruby is a super-genius 13-year-old spy who cracks codes and goes onto daring missions with her loyal butler, Hitch. She goes after a crime organization, but one thing gets her into trouble: She can’t keep a secret. From Rebel McKenzie by Candice Ransom. Disney/Hyperion. © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n . Dial Books by Liz zie K. Foley From Remarkable rs. for Young Re ade C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 13 Same Sun Here Silas House and Neela Vaswani. Ill. Hilary Schenker. Candlewick. In this novel written in two voices, the son of a Kentucky coal miner and an Indian immigrant girl in New York City find they have much in common. Their friendship creates a bridge between their cultural differences. Shadow *Stickman Odyssey, Book 2: The Wrath of Zozimos Christopher Ford. Philomel. Another mythological misadventure for the comical Zozimos in this reimagined Odyssey. Fast-paced action and silliness will keep readers attentive and entertained as the stick-figured hero seeks to reclaim the kingdom of Sticatha. The Takedown of Osama bin Laden Michael Morpurgo. Feiwel & Friends. Natalie Lunis. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. This winner of several awards is the adventurous story of a boy and his mother. They’ve fled war-torn Afghanistan. Captured and imprisoned, their only hope is a good friend and the need to find a lost loyal dog. Spider-Man: Inside the World of Your Friendly Neighborhood Hero Matthew K. Manning, with additional text by Tom DeFalco. DK Publishing. With fast-paced action, the inside story behind Spider-Man springs to life. Learn how his costume was created. Find out about his friends and how he made enemies. The history of Spider-Man is a true page-turner for older readers. Step-by-step the hunt for America’s most wanted Osama bin Laden engrosses older readers. They will follow the search from Afghanistan to Pakistan and read about the bravery of Navy Seals who went on a daring mission. Today’s Air Force Heroes Miriam Aronin. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. In these true tales of real heroes, read amazing accounts of courageous men and women who put their lives at risk. This book demonstrates the diversity among the many who have stepped up to make our country safer. Undead Ed Rotterly Ghoulstone. Ill. Nigel Baines. Razorbill. Ed Bagley is on a mission to save his town—from his own evil left arm! The hilariously gory misadventures of a newly undead zombie will have you ROFL. It’s gross-out fic with tons of pics. From Spider-Man: Inside the World of Your Friendly Neighborhood Hero by Matthew K. Manning, with additional text by Tom DeFalco. DK Publishing. Rot terly Ghoulstone From Undead Ed by ill. Nig el Baines. Razorb From Shadow by Mic hael Morpungo. Feiw el & Friends. 14 C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n . Ill. Michael Hearst. Ill. Arjen Noordeman, Christie Wright, and Jelmer Noordeman. Chronicle. Older readers will delve in to explore the weird and goofy-looking creatures roaming the earth. Interesting facts, habitats, and scientific names are only part of the most unusual creatures’ worlds that will keep readers turning the pages. Weird But True! 4: 300 Outrageous Facts National Geographic Kids. Ill. with photographs. National Geographic Children’s Books. Brightly colored, large illustrations with few words tell about unusual and interesting little-known facts throughout the world. Once one starts to read the book, it will be difficult to put it down again. White House Kids: The Perks, Pleasures, Problems, and Pratfalls of the Presidents’ Children Joe Rhatigan. Ill. Jay Shinn. Imagine. This is a collection of fun and unusual facts about some of the kids who have had the opportunity to live in the White House. Want to bowl? Just go to the basement! Fascinating tales of real-life kids. *Books that received the highest Children’s Choices team votes. Unusual Creatures: A Mostly Accurate Account of Some of Earth’s Strangest Animals Logo design © Tomie dePaola Children’s Choices 2013 Reading List Beginning Readers (Grades K–2) Amelia Bedelia’s First Vote. Herman Parish. Ill. Lynne Avril. HarperCollins Children’s Books/Greenwillow. Back to Front and Upside Down! Claire Alexander. Eerdmans Books for Young Readers. Bad Apple: A Tale of Friendship. Edward Hemingway. Penguin Young Readers Group. Bailey at the Museum. Harry Bliss. Scholastic. Bedtime for Monsters. Ed Vere. Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. *Big Mean Mike. Michelle Knudsen. Ill. Scott Magoon. Candlewick. *The Duckling Gets a Cookie!? Mo Willems. Hyperion Books for Children. Every Cowgirl Loves a Rodeo. Rebecca Janni. Ill. Lynne Avril. Dial Books for Young Readers. The Fly Flew In. David Catrow. Holiday House. Frog and Fly: Six Slurpy Stories. Jeff Mack. Philomel. Goldilocks and the Three Dinosaurs. Mo Willems. HarperCollins Children’s Books. Good News, Bad News. Jeff Mack. Chronicle. I Know a Wee Piggy. Kim Norman. Ill. Henry Cole. Dial Books for Young Readers. *I’ll Save You Bobo! Eileen Rosenthal. Ill. Marc Rosenthal. Simon & Schuster. Ladybug Girl and Bingo. Jacky Davis. Ill. David Soman. Dial Books for Young Readers. Lenore Finds a Friend: A True Story From Bedlam Farm. Jon Katz. Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. Library Mouse: A Museum Adventure. Daniel Kirk. Abrams Books for Young Readers. Little Dog Lost: The True Story of a Brave Dog Named Baltic. Mônica Carnesi. Nancy Paulsen Books. Llama Llama Time to Share. Anna Dewdney. Viking Children’s Books. Mice on Ice. Rebecca Emberley and Ed Emberley. Holiday House. Miss Fox’s Class Gets It Wrong. Eileen Spinelli. Ill. Anne Kennedy. Albert Whitman & Company. *Nighttime Ninja. Barbara DaCosta. Ill. Ed Young. Little, Brown Books for Young Readers. Otto the Book Bear. Katie Cleminson. Disney/Hyperion. *Pete the Cat and His Four Groovy Buttons. Eric Litwin. Ill. James Dean. HarperCollins Children’s Books. Pig Has a Plan. Ethan Long. Holiday House. Piggy Bunny. Rachel Vail. Ill. Jeremy Tankard. Feiwel & Friends. Plant a Kiss. Amy Krouse Rosenthal. Ill. Peter H. Reynolds. HarperCollins Children’s Books. Rat and Roach: Friends to the End. David Covel. Viking Children’s Books. Secret Agent Splat! Rob Scotton. HarperCollins Children’s Books. Señorita Gordita. Helen Ketteman. Ill. Will Terry. Albert Whitman & Company. Silly Doggy! Adam Stower. Orchard/Scholastic. The Three Ninja Pigs. Corey Rosen Schwartz. Ill. Dan Santat. Penguin Young Readers Group. Tyler Makes Pancakes! Tyler Florence. Ill. Craig Frazier. HarperCollins Children’s Books. Young Readers (Grades 3–4) Perks, Pleasures, From White House Kids: The Presidents’ Children Problems, and Pratfalls of the n. Imagine. by Joe Rhatigan. Ill. Jay Shin © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n From Weird But True! 4: 300 Outrageous Facts by National Geographic Kids. National Geographic Children’s Books. 5,000 Awesome Facts (About Everything!). National Geographic Kids. Ill. with photographs. National Geographic Children’s Books. Aaron Rodgers and the Green Bay Packers: Super Bowl XLV. Michael Sandler. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Another Brother. Matthew Cordell. Feiwel & Friends. *Bad Kitty for President. Nick Bruel. Roaring Brook. Bully. Patricia Polacco. Penguin Young Readers Group. Dear Cinderella. Mary Jane Kensington and Marian Moore. Ill. Julie Olson. Orchard/Scholastic. Dolphins in the Navy. Meish Goldish. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Freaky-Strange Buildings. Michael Sandler. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Garmann’s Secret. Stian Hole. Eerdmans Books for Young Readers. *Get the Scoop on Animal Poop! From Lions to Tapeworms: 251 Cool Facts About Scat, Frass, Dung, and More! Dawn Cusick. Ill. with photographs. Imagine. Giants Beware! Jorge Aguirre. Ill. Rafael Rosado. First Second. Great Dane: Gentle Giant. Stephen Person. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. *Homer. Diane deGroat and Shelley Rotner. Orchard/Scholastic. Illusionology: The Secret Science of Magic. Albert Schafer. Ill. David Wyatt and Levi Pinfold. Candlewick. Judy Moody and the Bad Luck Charm. Megan McDonald. Ill. Peter H. Reynolds. Candlewick. C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 15 Advanced Readers (Grades 5–6) A Black Hole Is Not a Hole. Carolyn Cinami DeCristofano. Ill. Michael Carroll. Charlesbridge. The Boy Project: Notes and Observations of Kara McAllister. Kami Kinard. Scholastic. Broxo. Zack Giallongo. First Second. Cardboard. Doug Tennapel. Graphix/Scholastic. Dark Mansions. Dinah Williams. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. *Dork Diaries 4: Tales From a Not-So-Graceful Ice Princess. Rachel Renée Russell. Simon & Schuster. Freaky Fast Frankie Joe. Lutricia Clifton. Holiday House. Goosebumps: Wanted: The Haunted Mask. R.L. Stine. Goosebumps/ Scholastic. Hades: Lord of the Dead (Olympians, Vol. 4). George O’Connor. First Second. Haunted Caves. Natalie Lunis. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Haunted Histories: Creepy Castles, Dark Dungeons, and Powerful Palaces. J.H. Everett and Marilyn Scott-Waters. Christy Ottaviano Books. The Hero’s Guide to Saving Your Kingdom. Christopher Healy. Ill. Todd Harris. Walden Pond/HarperCollins Children’s Books. Horrible Hauntings: An Augmented Reality Collection of Ghosts and Ghouls. Shirin Yim Bridges. Ill. William Maughan. Goosebottom. I Lay My Stitches Down: Poems of American Slavery. Cynthia Grady. Ill. Michele Wood. Eerdmans Books for Young Readers. Legends of Zita the Spacegirl. Ben Hatke. First Second. *Liar & Spy. Rebecca Stead. Wendy Lamb Books. *Pickle: The (Formerly) Anonymous Prank Club of Fountain Point Middle School. Kim Baker. Ill. Tim Probert. Roaring Brook. Pip and the Wood Witch Curse: A Spindlewood Tale (Book 1). Chris Mould. Albert Whitman & Company. Presidential Pets: The Weird, Wacky, Little, Big, Scary, Strange Animals That Have Lived in the White House. Julia Moberg. Ill. Jeff Albrecht Studios. Imagine. *Rebel McKenzie. Candice Ransom. Disney/Hyperion. Remarkable. Lizzie K. Foley. Dial Books for Young Readers. Ruby Redfort Look Into My Eyes. Lauren Child. Candlewick. Same Sun Here. Silas House and Neela Vaswani. Ill. Hilary Schenker. Candlewick. Shadow. Michael Morpurgo. Feiwel & Friends. Spider-Man: Inside the World of Your Friendly Neighborhood Hero. Matthew K.Manning, with additional text by Tom DeFalco. DK Publishing. *Stickman Odyssey, Book 2: The Wrath of Zozimos. Christopher Ford. Philomel. The Takedown of Osama bin Laden. Natalie Lunis. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Today’s Air Force Heroes. Miriam Aronin. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Undead Ed. Rotterly Ghoulstone. Ill. Nigel Baines. Razorbill. Unusual Creatures: A Mostly Accurate Account of Some of Earth’s Strangest Animals. Michael Hearst. Ill. Arjen Noordeman, Christie Wright, and Jelmer Noordeman. Chronicle. Weird But True!4: 300 Outrageous Facts. National Geographic Kids. Ill. with photographs. National Geographic Children’s Books. White House Kids: The Perks, Pleasures, Problems, and Pratfalls of the Presidents’ Children. Joe Rhatigan. Ill. Jay Shinn. Imagine. *Just Joking: 300 Hilarious Jokes, Tricky Tongue Twisters, and Ridiculous Riddles. National Geographic Children’s Books. Ill. with photographs. National Geographic Children’s Books. Kevin Durant. Michael Sandler. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Knuckle & Potty Destroy Happy World. James Proimos. Christy Ottaviano Books. Last Laughs: Animal Epitaphs. J. Patrick Lewis and Jane Yolen. Ill. Jeffrey Stewart Timmins. Charlesbridge. Looking at Lincoln. Maira Kalman. Nancy Paulsen Books. Max Goes to the Moon: A Science Adventure With Max the Dog. Jeffrey Bennett. Ill. Alan Okamoto. Big Kid Science. The Monster Returns. Peter McCarty. Henry Holt Books for Young Readers. My Pop-Up World Atlas. Anita Ganeri. Ill. Stephen Waterhouse. Templar. Pigmares: Porcine Poems of the Silver Screen. Doug Cushman. Charlesbridge. *Pluto Visits Earth! Steve Metzger. Ill. Jared D. Lee. Orchard/Scholastic. Quiz Whiz: 1,000 Super Fun, Mind-Bending, Totally Awesome Trivia Questions. National Geographic Kids. Ill. with photographs. National Geographic Children’s Books. Saving Animals After Tornadoes. Stephen Person. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Stupendous Sports Stadiums. Michael Sandler. Ill. with photographs. Bearport. Surviving the Hindenburg. Larry Verstraete. Ill. David Geister. Sleeping Bear. Third Grade Angels. Jerry Spinelli. Arthur Levine/Scholastic. Touch the Sky: Alice Coachman, Olympic High Jumper. Ann Malaspina. Ill. Eric Velasquez. Albert Whitman & Company. Choices More About Children’st Com mittee and -CBC Join Tha nk you to the 2012–2013 IRA hairs were Pamela Far ris coc tee mit com The review teams. in the field test were and Sheri Tucker. Tea m Leaders Terr i Schmidt, Uta h—Area 1 an van der Jag t, n Dr. Phi lip Tucker and Dr. Joh 2 a Pen nsylvan ia—Are Area 3 n Dr. Sheri Tucker, Ark ansas— Area 4 n Nancy Bau man n, Missou ri— n Dia na Por ter, Kentucky—Area 5 and IRA, or on how to For more information on the CBC Children’s Choices project, become involved in the IRA/CBC ts.php?page=child rens visit ww w.cbcbooks.org/readinglis rces/booklists/ choices or ww w.reading.org/resou childrenschoices.aspx. n *Books that received the highest Children’s Choices team votes. For over 50 years, the International Reading Association has been the trusted provider of ongoing professional development for teachers. IRA is committed to advancing worldwide literacy by improving reading instruction, disseminating research and information about reading, and encouraging the lifetime reading habit. Additional information about IRA can be found at www.reading.org. 16 C h i l d re n’s C h o i c e s • 2 0 1 3 © 2 0 1 3 I n t e r n a t i o n a l R e a d i n g A s s o c i a t i o n
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